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Brooklyn Nine-Nine actor Andre Braugher, who played Captain Holt, dies

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

Brooklyn Nine-Nine actor Andre Braugher, who played Captain Raymond Holt, died on Monday, December 11 at the age of 61. Remembering Captain Holt, here are some of his iconic lines in Brooklyn Nine Nine.

Brooklyn Nine-Nine actor Andre Braugher, who played Captain Raymond Holt, died on Monday, December 11 at the age of 61, Variety reported, citing confirmation from his publicist. The cause of his death is not yet known.

He had also played Detective Frank Pembleton on ‘Homicide: Life on Street’, for which he had won a lead actor Emmy. He had also won another Emmy for his performance in ‘Thief’.

Braugher was born in Chicago and graduated from Stanford University, following which he attended the Julliard School in the drama division.

He first appeared on screen as a Union soldier in ‘Glory’, where he played a free Black man Thomas Searles, who joins the first Black regiment. He then also played Kojak’s sidekick in the TV movie revival of ‘Kojak’.

As his TV career expanded, he also appeared in various feature films, with roles in ‘Frequency, ‘Duets, ‘City of Angels’, ‘The Mist’, ‘Salt’, among others.

He is survived by his wife and ‘Homicide: Life on the Street’ co-star Ami Brabson and his three children.

Here are some of the iconic lines by his character Captain Holt:

– “I don’t care for cheese. I’m a curd mudgeon”
– “Why is no one having a good time? I specifically requested it.”
– “I’m a human. I’m a human male”
– “Captain Wuntch, good to see you. But if you’re here, who’s guarding Hades?”
– “Wuntch is dead! BAGEL! BAGEL! BAGEL!”
– “No, from now on, call me… Velvet Thunder!”
– “If you love someone, you’ll remember what they look like”
– “You took the wrong fluffy boy!”
“Yas queen!”
“Vindication!”

His co-actor Terry Crews posted on Instagram, remembering Braugher. “Can’t believe you’re gone so soon. I’m honored to have known you, laughed with you, worked with you and shared 8 glorious years watching your irreplaceable talent. This hurts. You left us too soon. You taught me so much. I will be forever grateful for the experience of knowing you. Thank you for your wisdom, your advice, your kindness and your friendship,” he wrote, adding that Braugher showed him what a life well lived looks like.

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

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Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Henry Kissinger, US diplomat under two Presidents, dies at 100

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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US diplomat Henry Kissinger died on Wednesday, November 29 (local time) in Connecticut. He was 100-years-old. 

US diplomat Henry Kissinger died on Wednesday, November 29 (local time) in Connecticut. He was 100-years-old.

Kissinger was a Nobel Peace Prize winner and also served under two US presidents — Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford — as the secretary of state.

The former secretary of state Henry Kissinger dominated foreign policy as the United States extricated itself from Vietnam and broke down barriers with China.

With his gruff yet commanding presence and behind-the-scenes manipulation of power, Kissinger exerted uncommon influence on global affairs under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, earning both vilification and the Nobel Peace Prize. Decades later, his name still provoked impassioned debate over foreign policy landmarks long past.

Kissinger’s power grew during the turmoil of Watergate, when the politically attuned diplomat assumed a role akin to co-president to the weakened Nixon.

“No doubt my vanity was piqued,” Kissinger later wrote of his expanding influence. “But the dominant emotion was a premonition of catastrophe.”

A Jew who fled Nazi Germany with his family in his teens, Kissinger in his later years cultivated the reputation of respected statesman, giving speeches, offering advice to Republicans and Democrats alike and managing a global consulting business. He turned up in President Donald Trump’s White House on multiple occasions. But Nixon-era documents and tapes, as they trickled out over the years, brought revelations — many in Kissinger’s own words — that sometimes cast him in a harsh light.

Never without his detractors, Kissinger after he left government was dogged by critics who argued that he should be called to account for his policies on Southeast Asia and support of repressive regimes in Latin America.

With inputs from AP

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Berkshire Hathaway vice-chairman Charlie Munger dies aged 99

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

Born in 1924, Munger would have turned 100 on New Year’s day.

Charlie Munger, the billionaire philanthropist, Berkshire Hathaway vice chairman and regarded as Warren Buffett’s closest aide, has died aged 99 on Tuesday night in California.

“Munger peacefully died this morning at a California hospital,” a statement from Berkshire Hathaway said.

Responding to Munger’s death, Warren Buffett, the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway said that the company could not have been built to its present status without Charlie’s “inspiration, wisdom and participation.”

Born in 1924, Munger would have turned 100 on New Year’s day.

A trained attorney with expertise in real estate, Munger was also a name partner at a Los Angeles-based law firm Munger, Tolles & Olson, before joining hands with Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway in 1978.

An alumnus of the Harvard Law School, Munger held a degree in meteorology. Reports indicate that it was Munger’s passion for engineering that led to Berkshire Hathaway invest in Chinese auto company BYD.

However, Berkshire Hathaway has been consistently trimming stake in BYD with the most recent sale taking place on October 25 this year, taking Berkshire’s stake in the Hong Kong-listed company down to 7.98% from 8.05% earlier.

Munger’s death comes a week after Buffett donated $866 million worth of Berkshire’s stock as he looks to hang his boots after a journey of nearly six decades.

“At 93, I feel good but fully realize I am playing in extra innings,” he had said in a letter to shareholders.

Buffett and Munger’s friendship dates back to even before the former took over Berkshire Hathway. In fact, Buffett was the reason for Munger to start his investment career.

Investor Mohnish Pabrai had tweeted exactly a month earlier on October 29 about “breaking bread” with Charlie and the nonagenarian investor being in good health.

Apple CEO Tim Cook called Munger a “titan of business and a keen observer of the world around him.”

Munger was one of the most open critics of cryptocurrencies, saying that the governments made a huge mistake in allowing their proliferation. Calling them “worthless,” Munger compared them to a veneral disease, saying they will only cause harm. “It is ridiculous that anyone would choose to invest in cryptocurrencies,” he had said earlier this year in an interview to CNBC.

“I think a life properly lived is just learn, learn, learn all the time,” was one of Munger’s most popular quotes.

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

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Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Rosalynn Carter, US First Lady called ‘Steel Magnolia,’ dies

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

Former US First Lady Rosalynn Carter died peacefully at her home in Plains, Georgia, on Sunday with family by her side, the Carter Center said in a statement

Rosalynn Carter, who broke new ground as an activist US first lady by attending her husband’s Cabinet meetings and leading a presidential effort to improve care for the mentally ill, all while raising a young daughter at the White House, has died. She was 96.

Carter died peacefully at her home in Plains, Georgia, on Sunday with family by her side, the Carter Center said in a statement. In May, the Carter family said she had been diagnosed with dementia while continuing to live “happily at home” with her husband, former President Jimmy Carter, who was receiving hospice care. She began at-home hospice care as well, earlier this month.

The 39th president of the US, a Democrat, considered his wife an irreplaceable adviser and partner during his terms as Georgia governor and, from 1977 to 1981, as president. Her presence at Cabinet meetings, starting in 1978, “proved her unprecedented status,” Gil Troy, a history professor at McGill University in Montreal, wrote in his 2000 book on presidential couples.

The couple’s “relationship in the White House was something new and historic,” Jonathan Alter wrote in his 2020 biography of Jimmy Carter, as evidenced by the working lunch they had every Tuesday, at which they would “nibble salads and discuss personnel, her pet projects, campaign strategy, foreign policy challenges and other matters of substance.”

The first presidential spouse with her own policy staff, Carter was appointed to lead the presidential commission on mental health that her husband created. She also appeared as a witness at a 1979 hearing on the topic held by a Senate subcommittee.

The recommendations of her commission helped spur passage of a 1980 federal law that increased government funding to mental health programs. President Ronald Reagan, a Republican, rescinded the law after taking office the following year.

Carter’s high level of engagement at the White House generated comparisons to Eleanor Roosevelt. A more traditional former first lady, Mamie Eisenhower, once confessed to being “somewhat taken aback by the variety and extent of my projects,” Carter revealed in her 1984 memoir, First Lady From Plains.

A New York Times profile during the 1976 presidential campaign said Carter’s tireless campaigning “evokes the image of a steel magnolia blossom.” The nickname “Steel Magnolia” stuck. So did the president’s description of his wife as “an almost equal extension of myself.”

Grain Embargo

Her influence did have its limits. She said she tried, without success, to persuade her husband to wait until after the Iowa presidential caucuses of 1980 to impose a grain embargo against the Soviet Union. The embargo hurt US farmers by cutting off an avenue for sales of their corn, wheat and soybeans.

“I am much more political than Jimmy and was more concerned about popularity and winning reelection,” Carter wrote in her memoir, “but I have to say that he had the courage to tackle the important issues, no matter how controversial — or politically damaging — they might be.”

Jimmy Carter saw his popularity plummet during a term marred by soaring inflation and the holding of American hostages in Iran. He was trounced by Reagan in the 1980 election.

He later recalled, “Rosalynn was much more grieved and despondent than I was.”

Born on Aug. 18, 1927, in Plains, Georgia, population 600, Eleanor Rosalynn Smith was the embodiment of small-town connections.

Her father, Edgar, ran a farm, owned an auto-repair store and drove a school bus. He married Allie Murray, nine years his junior, in 1926 after she finished college with a teaching degree. The two had met years earlier when, as a high school student, she rode his bus.

Rosalynn, the first of their four children, was followed by two brothers, Jerry and Murray, and then a sister, Lillian Allethea — named after a beloved local nurse, Lillian Carter, known as “Miss Lillian,” whose family ran a farm just outside town.

High School Crush

Young Rosalynn became close friends with Miss Lillian’s daughter, Ruth Carter, and developed a crush on Ruth’s older brother Jimmy, a Navy cadet. The crush endured as Rosalynn graduated high school in 1944 as class valedictorian and entered Georgia Southwestern College, then a two-year program, in nearby Americus. It was later renamed Georgia Southwestern State University.

“I couldn’t keep my eyes off the photograph of her idolized, older brother pinned up on her bedroom wall,” the future first lady recalled. “He seemed so glamorous and out of reach.”

Ruth Carter arranged a meeting in the summer of 1945. Jimmy, 20, and Rosalynn, 17, quickly became a couple. Home for Christmas from the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, he proposed. Rosalynn said it was too early. Two months later, visiting Annapolis, she accepted.

Not everybody was pleased. The future president’s father, Earl, “was ambitious for Jimmy, had great plans for him, and being married to an 18-year-old girl from Plains was not one of them,” Rosalynn later wrote.

The couple married July 7, 1946, after Rosalynn’s graduation from Georgia Southwestern. They began the peripatetic life of a military family, living near bases in Connecticut, Hawaii and California. She gave birth to their first three children: sons Jack, Chip and Jeff.

Jimmy Carter resigned his naval commission and returned home after the death of his father in 1953 to take over the family’s peanut-farming seed-supply businesses.

Georgia Campaigns

Rosalynn Carter held down the farm as her husband embarked on a political career, starting with a successful bid for the Georgia Senate in 1962. She researched issues for him in his campaigns for governor in 1966 and then, successfully, in 1970. In 1967, she gave birth to their fourth child, daughter Amy.

As Georgia’s first lady, Carter developed her passion for mental-health issues, serving on a commission that recommended a shift from large state institutions to smaller mental-health centers. Her husband enacted the change.

She made her debut as a national figure in the 1976 campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination, visiting 34 states. Deeply religious, she said she took a moment to pray before a speech or interview. A favorite fashion accessory was a tiny gold pin in the shape of a peanut.

Once in the White House, she took a crash course in Spanish to prepare for a 13-day, seven-nation diplomatic tour of Latin America that was more substantial in tone than most goodwill trips of her predecessors. The headline of a New York Times news analysis called her “Ambassador Rosalynn Carter.”

Her “most historic role” as first lady came in the field of children’s health, Alter wrote in his biography of the former president. With Betty Bumpers, the wife of Arkansas Senator Dale Bumpers, Carter went state-to-state to promote preschool immunizations, ultimately persuading 33 states to enact bills mandating proof of vaccination before children entered kindergarten or first grade. She later took the push abroad.

In all, she “helped prevent tens of millions of children from getting sick and saved tens of thousands of lives worldwide,” Alter wrote.

All the while, Carter was tending to daughter Amy, who was 9 when the family moved into the White House. Their three sons by then were adults. The Carters opted to send her to Washington’s public schools, and Rosalynn accompanied Amy to her first day of classes. When Amy took up the violin, so did her mom, and they practiced together.

The Carters returned to Plains after the 1980 election. Rosalynn Carter continued to pursue her interest in mental health by hosting seminars at Emory University and creating the Rosalynn Carter Institute for Caregiving at her alma mater.

With her husband, she founded the Atlanta-based Carter Center, which advocates human rights around the world. She accompanied her husband on many of the humanitarian missions for which he was honored with the 2002 Nobel Peace Prize.

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Sahara Group chief Subrata Roy dies of cardiorespiratory arrest

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

According to the Sahara Group’s statement, Subrata Roy was admitted to the Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital & Medical Research Institute in Mumbai on Sunday after his health deteriorated.

Sahara Group chief Subrata Roy died due to a cardiorespiratory arrest at a private hospital in Mumbai on Tuesday after a prolonged illness, according to a company statement. He was 75.

Having created a huge business empire across retail, real estate and financial services sectors, Roy was at the centre of a huge controversy and faced multiple regulatory and legal battles in connection with his group firms that were accused of circumventing regulations with Ponzi schemes, allegations his group always denied.

According to the company statement, he was admitted to the Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital & Medical Research Institute in Mumbai on Sunday after his health deteriorated.

He passed away at the hospital at 10.30 pm on Tuesday due to a cardiorespiratory arrest following an extended battle with complications arising from metastatic malignancy, hypertension and diabetes, it added.

“It is with profound sadness that Sahara India Pariwar informs the demise of our Hon’ble ‘Saharasri’ Subrata Roy Sahara, Managing Worker and Chairman, Sahara India Pariwar,” the group said in the statement.

Calling him an “inspirational leader and visionary”, the statement said, “His loss will be deeply felt by the entire Sahara India Pariwar. Saharasri ji was a guiding force, a mentor, and a source of inspiration for all who had the privilege to work alongside him.” Sahara India Pariwar is committed to upholding Roy’s legacy and will continue to honour his vision in driving the organisation, it added.

In his prime, Roy had made the Sahara Group a multi-billion dollar enterprise that counted itself among the biggest employers of the country.

He was also known to have friends among the famous and powerful across the fields of politics and Bollywood.

Having scripted one of the most famous rags-to-riches stories of the country, Roy went on to expand his business across various sectors ranging from finance, housing, manufacturing, aviation and the media and became a household name.

His enterprise went on to own landmark global properties, including New York’s Plaza Hotel and London’s iconic Grosvenor House.

Under his leadership, Sahara also sponsored the Indian cricket and hockey teams and owned a Formula One racing team.

Weddings of his two sons some two decades ago are still among the biggest parties ever seen in India. He lived in Lucknow.

His troubles began in November 2010 when stock market regulator Sebi asked two entities of Sahara Group not to mobilise funds from equity markets or from issuance of any security to the public while restraining Roy from approaching the public for raising money.

Roy was arrested in 2014 on the orders of the Supreme Court after he failed to appear before it in a contempt case arising out of non-refund of more than Rs 20,000 crore to investors by two of his companies.

He was later granted bail but troubles continued for his various businesses.

Two Sahara Group companies — Sahara India Real Estate Corporation (SIRECA) and Sahara Housing Investment Corporation — raised funds in 2007-08 through a debenture instrument OFCD.

Later in June 2011, the regulator asked the two group entities to refund money collected from investors through Optionally Fully Convertible Debentures (OFCD) along with the return.

After a long process of appeals and cross-appeals, the Supreme Court had ordered in 2012 refund of deposits of its investors along with 15 per cent interest.

Sahara was eventually asked to deposit an estimated Rs 24,000 crore with Sebi for further refund to investors, though the group always maintained it amounted to “double payment” as it had already refunded more than 95 per cent of investors directly.

Once asked for proof of repayment, Roy famously sent across 100 truckloads of documents to Sebi, triggering a unique warehousing crisis for the regulator.

In another incident, a man from Gwalior threw ink on Roy’s face and called him a thief when he was brought to the Supreme Court in his trademark waistcoat and tie amid chaotic scenes.

The Sahara Group had earlier said it has always built its businesses by productively channelizing human capital spread across India and giving employment and work at people’s doorstep.

“In this way, Sahara is providing bread and butter to more than 14 lakh people in their own villages and towns. It is the country’s second-largest human capital after Indian Railways. This amount could have been used by the organisation to generate more employment and work and helped the country and therefore its economy,” it had said in an earlier statement.

Also Read: Chinese President Xi Jinping begins first US trip in six years

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

Previous Article

Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

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today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Aptech MD and CEO Anil Pant dies

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

In June, Aptech MD and CEO Anil Pant had gone on an indefinite leave because of sudden deterioration of his health. He died on Tuesday, August 15, the company said in a stock exchange filing.

Aptech’s managing director and CEO Anil Pant died on Tuesday, August 15.

“Dr Pant’s contribution and energy will be missed by the Company. All the directors and employees of the company convey their deepest condolences to his family,” the company said in an exchange filing on Tuesday.

In June, the company had said that Pant had gone on an indefinite leave because of sudden deterioration of his health. The company had informed the stock exchanges that it was taking measures to select an interim CEO.

Pant was the CEO and MD of Aptech since 2016. Prior to this, was he was associated with the likes of Sify Technologies and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS). He spent over 15 years in the IT and communication space, handling a variety of responsibilities such as sales, quality, delivery, marketing, product maangement, which culminated into the P&L responsibility in the last few roles.

He was the principal consultant at TCS from 2010 to 2016 and developed a $100 million practice in the testing domain. He was also the vice-president of Sify Technologies from 2008 to 2010. He worked in various roles in companie such as Crompton Greaves, Tally, Wipro and Blow Past.

Pant held a Bachelor of Engineering degree a from the BMS College of Engineering and also a PhD in information technology from Licoln University College, Malaysia.

Also Read: IndiGo Block Deal: 5% equity changes hands, 150-day lock-in for Gangwal family before next sale

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

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Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Indian football legend Mohammed Habib dies at 74

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

Habib battled dementia and Parkinson’s syndrome for the past few years and breathed his last in his hometown of Hyderabad, leaving behind his wife and three daughters.

Mohammed Habib, the football maestro of the 1970s, who left an indelible mark by scoring against Pele’s New York Cosmos while donning the Mohun Bagan jersey, passed away on Tuesday at the age of 74. A notable figure in Indian football history, Habib’s brilliance caught the attention of Pele himself, elevating his game to legendary heights.

Habib battled dementia and Parkinson’s syndrome for the past few years and breathed his last in his hometown of Hyderabad, leaving behind his wife and three daughters.

A bronze medallist in the 1970 Asian Games in Bangkok under the captaincy of fellow Hyderabadi Syed Nayeemuddin and manager PK Banerjee, Habib has represented the big three of Kolkata Maidan — Mohun Bagan, East Bengal and Mohammedan Sporting in his heydays, dominating the Mecca of Indian

Following a successful career that saw him gain legendary status and earn the tag of the country’s first “true professional” footballer for his refusal to accept numerous job offers that came his way owing to his on-field heroics, Habib took to coaching at the Tata Football Academy (TFA). Later, he also acted as chief coach of the Indian Football Association academy in Haldia.

At a time when the clubs would pay meagre sum to their best players, he was unruffled and remained a professional in true sense throughout his career, for he considered playing football as his real and only profession.

One of the highlights of Habib’s career was when he played for Mohun Bagan against the visiting Cosmos Club which also featured the legendary Pele in 1977 in a friendly on a rain-soaked Eden Gardens.

Up against a visiting team that had a star-studded line up with big names like Pele, Carlos Alberto, Georgio Chinaglia and others in its ranks, Mohun Bagan held their own in a creditable 2-2 draw with midfield mainstay Habib being one of the scorers. In one of his biggest acknowledgments, Habib was singed out by Pele after the match with the one of the world’s greatest player praising his game.

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

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Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Sulabh International founder Bindeshwar Pathak passes away at AIIMS Delhi

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

The 80-year-old was the founder of Sulabh International, an India-based social service organisation which works to promote human rights, environmental sanitation, waste management and reforms through education.

Bindeshwar Pathak, the pioneering founder of Sulabh International and a prominent social activist known for his transformative work in public sanitation, passed away on Tuesday at AIIMS Delhi due to a sudden cardiac arrest.

The 80-year-old visionary had hoisted the national flag at Sulabh International headquarters on Independence Day morning before collapsing. He was pronounced brought dead at 1.42 pm due to the cardiac arrest, a source at the hospital confirmed.

In a post on X, formerly Twitter, the Sulabh International Social Service Organisation said, “Founder Sulabh Sanitation, Social Reform and Human Rights Movement, Dr. Bindeshwar Pathak is no more. He died of cardiac arrest at All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi.” “He was rushed to the hospital after he complained of uneasiness in the midst of Independence Day celebrations at the campus of Sulabh, Palam-Dabri Road, New Delhi,” it said.

President Droupadi Murmu expressed sadness over the demise of Pathak and extended her condolences to the bereaved family members.

“The news of the demise of Shri Bindeshwar Pathak, the founder of Sulabh International, is very sad. Shri Pathak had taken a revolutionary initiative in the field of cleanliness. He was honoured with many awards including the Padma Bhushan. I express my condolences to his family and members of Sulabh International,” Murmu said in a post in Hindi on X, formerly Twitter.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi also paid tributes to of Sulabh International founder, describing his death as a profound loss to the nation.

“He was a visionary who worked extensively for societal progress and empowering the downtrodden,” the PM said, noting it was Pathak’s mission to build a cleaner India.  Modi said Pathak provided monumental support to the Swachh Bharat Mission and his passion towards cleanliness was always visible during their conversations.

“His work will continue to inspire several people. My deepest condolences to his family and loved ones during this difficult time. Om Shanti,” he said.

“Deeply anguished by the demise of distinguished social activist and visionary founder of Sulabh International, Dr. Bindeshwar Pathak Ji. His relentless dedication to eradicating manual scavenging and advancing sanitation has uplifted countless lives. My thoughts and prayers are with his bereaved family members during this hour of grief,” tweeted Vice President Jagdeep Dhankar.

The 80-year-old was the founder of Sulabh International, an India-based social service organisation which works to promote human rights, environmental sanitation, waste management and reforms through education.

Pathak founded Sulabh International in 1970 with a vision to eradicate open defecation and unclean public toilets. The organisation’s pioneering efforts led to the development of the revolutionary Sulabh toilet, a low-cost, eco-friendly solution that has revolutionised sanitation practices across the nation.

Sulabh toilet revolutionised sanitation practices, providing millions with access to clean and dignified restroom facilities.

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Pepperfry co-founder Ambareesh Murty dies of cardiac arrest in Leh

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

 Listen to the Article (6 Minutes)

Summary

Ambareesh Murty, the co-founder of online furniture store Pepperfry, died of a cardiac arrest in Leh on Monday, August 7, night.

Ambareesh Murty, the co-founder of the e-commerce furniture and home goods platform Pepperfry, died of a cardiac arrest in Leh on Monday, August 7, night.

Ashish Shah, the other co-founder of Pepperfry, in a tweet on Tuesday morning said, “Extremely devastatd to inform that my friend, mentor, brother, soulmate @AmbareeshMurty is no more. Lost him yesterday night to a cardiac arrest at Leh. Please pray for him and for strength to his family and near ones.”

The company, in a statement, mourned the death of its CEO, “The Pepperfry family, along with its employees, investors, partners, and customers, mourn the loss of a visionary leader who played a pivotal role in shaping our journey. At this challenging time, our thoughts and prayers are with Ambareesh’s family, friends, and loved ones. We extend our heartfelt condolences to them and stand by them in their moment of grief,” it said.

“We would like to assure our customers, partners, and stakeholders that Pepperfry remains steadfast in its commitment to delivering exceptional products and services. The entire Pepperfry team is dedicated to upholding the values that Ambareesh instilled in the company and ensuring that his legacy continues to guide us into the future.”

“As we grieve the loss of a remarkable individual, we also celebrate the legacy of Ambareesh Murty and the lasting impact he has left on our organization and the industry as a whole,” the statement further added.

Murty was a graduate from the Delhi College of Engineering. He completed his MBA from the Indian Institite of Management of Calcutta (IIMC. Murty forayed into the business world 27 years ago when he joined as management trainee at Cadbury. He worked with the chocolate manufacturer for around five-and-a-half years.

He then ventured into the financial sector, where he took on the role of VP marketing and customer service at ICICI AMC (now ICICI Prudential) for nearly two years.

This was followed by a brief five months at Levi’s, after which he embared on his own venture, Origin Resources, which tailored to aid mutual fund companies in India. However, the startup was shut in 2005, following which he joined as a marketing manager at Britannia.

Seven months later, he joined eBay India, where he took on the role of country manager for the India, Malaysia and the Philippines. In 2012, Murty and Shah started their own venture Pepperfry.

Also Read: India bars makers of military drones from using Chinese parts

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

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today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Cormac McCarthy, lauded author of ‘The Road’ and ‘No Country for Old Men,’ dies at 89

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

Pulitzer prize-winning novelist Cormac McCarthy was raised in Knoxville, Tennessee died of natural causes at his home in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Cormac McCarthy, the Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist who in prose both dense and brittle took readers from the southern Appalachians to the desert Southwest in such novels as “The Road,” “Blood Meridian” and “All the Pretty Horses,” died on Tuesday. He was 89.

Publisher Alfred A Knopf, a Penguin Random House imprint, announced that McCarthy died of natural causes at his home in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

“For 60 years, he demonstrated an unwavering dedication to his craft, and to exploring the infinite possibilities and power of the written word,” Penguin Random House CEO Nihar Malaviya said in a statement. “Millions of readers around the world embraced his characters, his mythic themes, and the intimate emotional truths he laid bare on every page, in brilliant novels that will remain both timely and timeless, for generations to come.”

McCarthy, raised in Knoxville, Tennessee, was compared to William Faulkner for his expansive, Old Testament style and rural settings. McCarthy’s themes, like Faulkner’s, often were bleak and violent and dramatised how the past overwhelmed the present. Across stark and forbidding landscapes and rundown border communities, he placed drifters, thieves, prostitutes and old, broken men, all unable to escape fates determined for them well before they were born. As the doomed John Grady Cole of McCarthy’s celebrated “Border” trilogy would learn, dreams of a better life were only dreams, and falling in love an act of folly.

“Every man’s death is a standing in for every other,” McCarthy wrote in “Cities of the Plain,” the trilogy’s final book. “And since death comes to all there is no way to abate the fear of it except to love that man who stands for us.”

Also Read: David Sassoon Library in a new light: A landmark of literature and legacy

McCarthy’s own story was one of belated, and continuing, achievement and popularity. Little known to the public at age 60, he would become one of the country’s most honored and successful writers despite rarely talking to the press. He broke through commercially in 1992 with “All the Pretty Horses” and over the next 15 years won the National Book Award and the Pulitzer, was a guest on Oprah Winfrey’s show and saw his novel “No Country for Old Men” adapted by the Coen brothers into an Oscar-winning movie. Fans of the Coens would discover that the film’s terse, absurdist dialogue, so characteristic of the brothers’ work, was lifted straight from the novel.

“The Road,” his stark tale of a father and son who roam a ravaged landscape, brought him his widest audience and highest acclaim. It won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for fiction and was selected by Winfrey for her book club. In his Winfrey interview, McCarthy said that while typically he didn’t know what generates the ideas for his books, he could trace “The Road” to a trip he took with his young son to El Paso, Texas, early in the decade. Standing at the window of a hotel in the middle of the night as his son slept nearby, he started to imagine what El Paso might look like 50 or 100 years in the future.

“I just had this image of these fires up on the hill … and I thought a lot about my little boy,” he said.

He told Winfrey he didn’t care how many people read “The Road.”

“You would like for the people that would appreciate the book to read it. But, as far as many, many people reading it, so what?” he said.

McCarthy dedicated the book to his son, John Francis, and said having a child as an older man “forces the world on you, and I think it’s a good thing.” The Pulitzer committee called his book “the profoundly moving story of a journey.”

“It boldly imagines a future in which no hope remains, but in which the father and his son, ‘each the other’s world entire,’ are sustained by love,” the citation read in part. “Awesome in the totality of its vision, it is an unflinching meditation on the worst and the best that we are capable of: ultimate destructiveness, desperate tenacity, and the tenderness that keeps two people alive in the face of total devastation.”

After “The Road,” little was heard from McCarthy over the next 15 years and his career was presumed over. But in 2022, Knopf made the startling announcement that it would release a pair of connected novels he had referred to in the past: “The Passenger” and “Stella Maris,” narratives about a brother and sister, mutually obsessed siblings, and the legacy of their father, a physicist who had worked on atomic technology. “Stella Maris” was notable, in part, because it centered on a female character, an acknowledged weakness of McCarthy’s.

“I don’t pretend to understand women,” he told Winfrey.

His first novel, “The Orchard Keeper” — written in Chicago while he was working as an auto mechanic — was published by Random House in 1965. His editor was Albert Erskine, Faulkner’s longtime editor.

Other novels include “Outer Dark,” published in 1968; “Child of God” in 1973; and “Suttree” in 1979. The violent “Blood Meridian,” about a group of bounty hunters along the Texas-Mexico border murdering Indians for their scalps, was published in 1985.

His “Border Trilogy” books were set in the Southwest along the border with Mexico: “All the Pretty Horses” (1992) — a National Book Award winner that was turned into a feature film; “The Crossing” (1994), and “Cities of the Plain” (1998).

McCarthy said he was always lucky. He recalled living in a shack in Tennessee and running out of toothpaste, then going out and finding a toothpaste sample in the mailbox.

“That’s the way my life has been. Just when things were really, really bleak, something would happen,” said McCarthy, who won a MacArthur Fellowship — one of the so-called “genius grants” — in 1981.

In 2009, Christie’s auction house sold the Olivetti typewriter he used while writing such novels as “The Road” and “No Country for Old Men” for $254,500. McCarthy, who bought the Olivetti for $50 in 1958 and used it until 2009, donated it so the proceeds could be used to benefit the Santa Fe Institute, a nonprofit interdisciplinary scientific research community. He once said he didn’t know any writers and preferred to hang out with scientists.

The Southwestern Writers Collection at Texas State University-San Marcos purchased his archives in 2008, including correspondence, notes, drafts, proofs of 11 novels, a draft of an unfinished novel and materials related to a play and four screenplays.

McCarthy attended the University of Tennessee for a year before joining the Air Force in 1953. He returned to the school from 1957 to 1959, but left before graduating. As an adult, he lived around the Great Smoky Mountains before moving West in the late 1970s, eventually settling in Santa Fe.

His Knoxville boyhood home, long abandoned and overgrown, was destroyed by fire in 2009.

Also Read: Masterchef Australia finalist Kishwar Chowdhury | From home cook to curating signature menus

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

Previous Article

Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

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today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
Quiz
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